An Old Favorite Gains New Life

   “Gaslight,â€� at The Sherman Playhouse, is a pleasant  evening spent in a Victorian sitting room with a woman convinced she is going mad, her husband who is doing the convincing and a retired police officer who will will be doing the saving.     

    This is the original play “Angel Streetâ€� by Patrick Hamilton — a hit in London in 1938 and an even bigger hit on Broadway, where it opened two days before Pearl Harbor and ran for more than three years. And why not?  Here is a play that combines traditional Victorian stage and plot devices (oh, how many times those gas sconces flare and dim) with an overlay of  naturalism.  And the three main characters are no mere cyphers:  They interact emotionally.

   The playhouse, of course, chose to name its evening after the great 1944 film based on the play, a film that earned Ingrid Bergman an Oscar and introduced the 17-year-old Angela Lansbury.

But even greatly rewritten, shot in atmospheric black and white with many scenes outside the claustrophobic Angel Street house, the film retained the play’s basic plot. (For those few who don’t know it, I’ll not reveal it).

   Sherman first-time director John Taylor — born in England and last seen here as Herod, the best thing in an otherwise disastrous “Salomeâ€� — has directed a conservative, well-blocked period production with excellent sets and costumes from Leif Smith and Terry Hawley.  I question placing the Victorian fainting couch with its back to us, though I suppose Taylor hoped for a coup de theatre with evil Mr. Manningham reclining there and delivering his first lines hidden from view.  A little obvious.

   The cast is mostly very good. Steve Manzino’s Manningham is mildly sinister, Vicki J. Sosbe is Bella, the lovely wife increasingly sure she is going mad (her mother died in an asylum) and Viv Berger,  playing Sergeant Rough, will remind you of Peter Falk with a Cockney accent.  He is terrific.  Sheila Echevarria plays Elizabeth, the older maid concerned for Mrs. Manningham’s welfare, and Katya Collazo is much better as Nancy, the younger disdainful maid who comes on to Manningham, than she was as Salome.

                                           
     “Gaslightâ€� plays at The Sherman Playhouse Fridays and Saturdays, Sept. 25,26; Oct. 2,3 and 9,10 at 8 p.m.  

   There is a matinee on Sunday, Sept. 27, at 2 p.m.  Call 860 354-3622 for reservations.

    

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